| Literature DB >> 32290211 |
Piera Eusepi1, Lisa Marinelli1, Fátima García-Villén2, Ana Borrego-Sánchez2,3, Ivana Cacciatore1, Antonio Di Stefano1, Cesar Viseras2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Carvacrol, an essential oil with antimicrobial activity against a wide range of pathogens, and its water soluble carvacrol prodrugs (WSCP1-3) were intercalated into montmorillonite (VHS) interlayers to improve their stability in physiological media and promote their absorption in the intestine.Entities:
Keywords: carvacrol; clay; montmorillonite; prodrugs
Year: 2020 PMID: 32290211 PMCID: PMC7179022 DOI: 10.3390/ma13071793
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1(a) Chemical structures of water soluble carvacrol prodrugs (WSCP1-3) and (b) proposed bioactivation of WSCP1-3 under alkaline conditions.
Figure 2Relative difference (RD%) of prodrugs conversion over time in (a) water and different buffer media at pH (b) 1.2, (c) 6.8, and (d) 7.4. Values are the means of three experiments and error bars represent the standard deviation.
The first-order dissociation rate constants (Kobs) and half-live times (t1/2) of WSCP1-3 at pH 6.8 and 7.4 buffers.
| pH | t1/2/Kobs | WSCP1 | WSCP2 | WSCP3 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| pH 6.8 | t1/2 (h) | 2.33 (±0.07) | 0.76 (±0.01) | 18.17 (±0.10) |
| Kobs (h−1) | 0.2982 (±0.0106) | 0.9027 (±0.0042) | 0.0381 (±0.0002) | |
| pH 7.4 | t1/2 (h) | 4.37 (±0.37) | 0.88 (±0.07) | 16.66 (±0.23) |
| Kobs (h−1) | 0.1937 (±0.0671) | 0.7878 (±0.0629) | 0.0420 (±0.0006) |
Values are means of three experiments and standard deviation is given in parentheses.
Figure 3Percentage WSCP1-3 adsorption into Montmorillonite (VHS). Each experiment was repeated three times and error bars represent the standard deviation.
Figure 4Nanohybrids and raw components analyzed by (a) X-ray Power Diffraction (XRPD), (b) thermogravimetric analysis (TGA), and (c) differential scanning calorimetry (DSC).
Summary of thermal events obtained from TGA and DSC analyses.
| Sample | Temperature (°C) Range of Each Step | DSC Event (°C) | TGA Weight Loss (% w/w) | Thermal Event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| VHS | 40–120 | 87 (endo) | 6.7 | Desorption of hydration water |
| 600–750 | - | 4.3 | VHS dehydroxylation | |
| WSCP1 | - | 125 | 0.0 | Solid–solid phase transition (polymorphism) |
| - | 166 | 0.0 | Crystal melting point | |
| 170–350 | 224 | ~80.0 | Thermolysis of the ester group, subsequent evaporation of carvacrol moiety | |
| 450–600 | - | ~15.0 | Oxidation of the aminoacidic portion | |
| WSCP2 | - | 165 | 0.0 | Crystal melting point |
| 170–350 | 248 | ~90 | Thermolysis of the ester group, subsequent evaporation of carvacrol moiety | |
| 450–600 | ~10 | Oxidation of the aminoacidic portion | ||
| WSCP-3 | - | 53 | 0.0 | Solid–solid phase transition (polymorphism) |
| - | 81 | 0.0 | Crystal melting point | |
| 170–350 | 241 | ~80.0 | Thermolysis of the ester group, subsequent evaporation of carvacrol moiety | |
| 450–600 | - | ~15.0 | Oxidation of the aminoacidic portion | |
| WSCP1-VHS | 40–100 | 60 | 3.3 | Evaporation of hydration water |
| 170-–350 | - | 13.5 | Drug decomposition | |
| 500–750 | - | 7.2 | Overlapped aminoacidic drug portion oxidation and VHS dehydroxylation | |
| WSCP2-VHS | 40–100 | - | ~50 | Evaporation of hydration water |
| 170–350 | 267 | ~15 | Drug decomposition | |
| 500–750 | - | 5.7 | Overlapped aminoacidic drug portion oxidation and VHS dehydroxylation | |
| WSCP3-VHS | 40–100 | 68 | 2.3 | Evaporation of hydration water |
| 170–350 | - | 16.1 | Drug decomposition | |
| 500–750 | - | 5.2 | Overlapped aminoacidic drug portion oxidation and VHS dehydroxylation |
Figure 5Nanohybrids and raw components analyzed by Fourier transform infrared (FTIR).
Figure 6Amount of released WSCP1-3 at pH (a) 1.2 and (b) 6.8. Amount of carvacrol (CAR) released from WSCP1–3 and WSCP1–3 adsorbed–VHS hybrids at pH 6.8 (c). Each experiment was repeated three times and error bars represent the standard deviation.